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A Horizon of (Im)possibilities: A Chronicle of Brazil’s Conservative Turn: Contents

A Horizon of (Im)possibilities: A Chronicle of Brazil’s Conservative Turn
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table of contents
  1. Title
  2. Copyright
  3. Contents
  4. Endorsements
  5. Notes on Contributors
  6. List of Figures
  7. Foreword
  8. Preface
  9. Introduction: Brazil’s Conservative Return
  10. Looking Back: How did We Get Here?
    1. 1. The Past of the Present
    2. 2. Denied Recognition: Threats Against the Rights of Quilombola Communities
    3. 3. From Orkut to Brasília: The Origins of the New Brazilian Right
    4. 4. Ritual, Text and Politics: The Evangelical Mindset and Political Polarisation
  11. The Horizon Ahead: Where are We Going?
    1. 5. After Affirmative Action: Changing Racial Formations
    2. 6. From Participation to Silence: Grassroots Politics in Contemporary Brazil
    3. 7. Development Opportunity or National Crisis? The Implications of Brazil’s Political Shift for Elite Philanthropy and Civil Society Organising
    4. 8. Politics and Collective Mobilisation in Post-PT Brazil
  12. Conclusion: Shifting Horizons
  13. Afterword: No Matter Who Won, Indigenous Resistance will always Continue
  14. Index

Contents

Notes on contributors

List of figures

Foreword

Carly Barboza Machado

Preface

Katerina Hatzikidi and Eduardo Dullo

Introduction: Brazil’s conservative return

Katerina Hatzikidi and Eduardo Dullo

Looking back: how did we get here?

1. The past of the present

Lilia Moritz Schwarcz

2. Denied recognition: threats against the rights of quilombola communities

José M. Arruti and Thaisa Held

3. From Orkut to Brasília: the origins of the New Brazilian Right

Camila Rocha

4. Ritual, text and politics: the evangelical mindset and political polarisation

David Lehmann

The horizon ahead: where are we going?

5. After affirmative action: changing racial formations

Graziella Moraes Silva

6. From participation to silence: grassroots politics in contemporary Brazil

Andreza Aruska de Souza Santos

7. Development opportunity or national crisis? The implications of Brazil’s political shift for elite philanthropy and civil society organising

Jessica Sklair

8. Politics and collective mobilisation in post-PT Brazil

Jeff Garmany

Conclusion: shifting horizons

Katerina Hatzikidi and Eduardo Dullo

Afterword: No matter who won, indigenous resistance will always continue

Taily Terena, João Tikuna and Gabriel Soares

Index 

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